Tag: Augmented Reality

This Week in Sharing

Comments (0)
I don't know about where all you readers are, but where I am it's too hot to write snappy links round-up intros. Read more »

Children Imagine the Future of Technology

Comments (0)
Shareable's research partner Latitude conducted a very original study of what children want from technology. Read more »

Augmented City! In 3D!

Comments (6)
We've published quite a lot of writing about how we might experience urban life through augmented reality--see this speculative piece by Jack Graham and this Q&A with Bruce Sterling. Read more »

The Evolution of Sharing

Comments (1)
Sharing isn't unique to humans but we seem to do it a lot more than any other mammals. Read more »

Everything is Clickable

Comments (7)
In "5 Ways Augmented Reality is Making Your Life More Shareable," Jack Graham explains new technologies that are now allowing the Internet to intersect with the physical world. Read more »

Five Ways Augmented Reality Is Making Your Life More

Comments (2)
Ten years from now, your everyday environment will be completely different. Read more »

Augmented Cities: A Q&A with Bruce Sterling

Comments (0)
Today, Shareable.net publishes a new speculative fiction by Bruce Sterling, "The Exterminator's Want-Ad. Read more »

Bruce Sterling: State of the Spime

Comments (1)
In his 2005 nonfiction book Shaping Things, the science-fiction novelist Bruce Sterling predicts the development of a technology he calls "spimes," which would, essentially, embed a story in every object and link all objects to each other. Read more »

Augmented Reality Enables Sharing

Comments (1)
A collection of recent augmented reality and other innovations are laying the groundwork for the scaling of peer-to-peer sharing of physical assets. Read more »

Stickybits, Spimes, and Sharing

Comments (2)
Erik Hopp, the web dude who mainly built Shareable.net, loaned me a book that is taking over my mind. It's called Shaping Things, by the science-fiction novelist Bruce Sterling, and it came out in 2005. Read more »
Syndicate content

 Building Youth and Student Power for a New Economy

@shareable on twitter

Recent comments